Arun Jaitley is currently the Union Minister of Finance, Corporate Affairs and Information and Broadcasting of India. A Member of Parliament from the Bharatiya Janata Party, he is also the current Leader of the House in the Rajya Sabha. He has also previously been Minister for Law, Justice and Company Affairs (2000-2002) and Shipping (2001). In addition he has been Minister of State with independent charge for Information and Broadcasting (1999-2000) , Disinvestment (1999-2000) and Law, Justice and Company Affairs (2000). Jaitley began his political career as an Akhil Bharatiya Vidyarthi Parishad (ABVP) student leader in the Delhi University Campus in the seventies when he rose to be President of the University Students' Union in 1974. During the period of the Emergency, (1975-77) when civil liberties were suspended, he was under preventive detention for a period of 19 months. He was a prominent leader of a movement against corruption launched in the year 1973 by Raj Narain and Jayaprakash Narayan. He was the Convenor of the National Committee for Students and Youth organisation appointed by Jai Prakash Narayan. He was also active in civil rights movement and helped found PUCL Bulletin. Jaitely is also an eminent lawyer who practiced law before the Supreme Court of India and several High Courts in the country since 1977. He was appointed Additional Solicitor General of India by the V P Singh government in 1989 and did the paperwork for the investigations into the Bofors scandal. He has authored several publications on legal and current affairs.NEW DELHI: Refusing to relent on the pursuit of black money, Finance Minister Arun Jaitley today said the government will not "go soft" on bringing unaccounted wealth back into the formal system.

"This (black money) is not an issue which we are going to go soft on. Because, ultimately the target of any economy as it grows is to bring more and more resources into the system," he said at 'The India Summit 2015' organised by The Economist magazine.

The black money problem, Jaitley said, "is a problem confined to few individuals".

"We were reasonable enough to put people on notice and gave them a fair opportunity to bring them in... I can only tell that those who disagree on black money issue, well we will agree to differ," he said.

Jaitley said he had representations from people requesting him to "go easy" on domestic black money.

"I must tell you with great sense of discomfort that I have delegations coming to me saying even on domestic black money please go easy, because this is at least adding to economic activity. Now no economy can indefinitely sustain an argument of this kind," he said.

The government has from July 1, 2015 enacted the Blackmoney (Undisclosed Foreign Income and Assets) and Imposition of Tax Act to deal with foreign black money.

The Act provides for tax and penalty of 120 per cent and jail term of up to 10 years for holding undisclosed foreign assets. It also provided a 90-day compliance window to escape the harsh punishment by declaring the assets and paying 60 per cent tax and penalty.

As far as dealing with domestic black money is concerned, the government has already introduced the Benami Transactions (Prohibition) (Amendment) Bill, 2015, in the Lok Sabha and it is currently being scrutinised by the Standing Committee. It provides for attachment and confiscation of benami properties and also fine with imprisonment.

Jaitley said: "India needs all its resources to come within the system. Ultimately the expansion of our banking system, the Payments Banks, other scheme which we are still considering the pipeline, will try and bring all these resources into the banking system."

The government has already issued two sets to Frequently Answered Questions (FAQs) to clarify doubts of stakeholders regarding the foreign black money law. The 90-day compliance window to declare overseas wealth ends on September 30.